Victims of SS and Arrow Cross terror in the Budapest ghetto

Jews from Bulgarian-occupied Macedonia before deportation

Jews from Bulgarian-occupied Macedonia interned in the "Monopol" tobacco factory, which was used as a transit camp. They were ultimately deported to the Treblinka killing center. Skopje, Macedonia, March 1943.

Jews interned in the "Monopol" tobacco factory

Jews from Bulgarian-occupied Macedonia and Thrace interned in the "Monopol" tobacco factory, which was was used as a transit camp. They were ultimately deported to the Treblinka killing center. Skopje, Macedonia, March 11-31, 1943.

Nazis and Latvian militia men ordered Jews to undress, then shot them in the trenches.

Corpses of victims at the Klooga camp

Corpses of inmates discovered by Soviet troops at the Klooga forced-labor camp. Nazi guards and Estonian collaborators had executed the prisoners and then stacked the bodies for burning. Estonia, September 1944.

Pierre Laval

Aftermath of a shooting along the banks of the Danube River

This photograph shows the aftermath of a shooting along the banks of the Danube River in Budapest. Members of the pro-German Arrow Cross party massacred thousands of Jews along the banks of the Danube. Budapest, Hungary, 1944.

Deportation of Jews from Kishinev

Ustaša soldiers oversee the deportation of civilians

Ustaša (Croatian fascist) soldiers oversee the deportation of a group of civilians from Kozara region to a concentration camp, in the pro-German fascist state of Croatia established following the partition of Yugoslavia. Croatia, between 1941 and 1944.